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On Apr 21, 9:17*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 21 Apr 2010 18:09:16 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: There's a lot of sail boats that have 125 hp on up. The Ford Lehman diesels are or at least were a popular marine engine for large sailers as well as trawlers. I know this is a 72 ft'r but it has twin Leymans at 120 hp each. It turns out that the horsepower required for a boat to reach so called hull speed is mostly a function of weight, and it is a surprisingly small number for boats less than 100 tons or so. Then you have to add in a fudge factor however for adverse conditions, plus parasitic losses for things like alternators, refrigeration compressors, hydraulic pumps, etc. * There are also losses in the transmission and cutlass bearings. * A 70,000 pound trawler in theory needs less than 90 hp to reach hull speed *but to have reasonable margins of safety you need 3 or 4 times that much. That's kid of what i was thinking Wayne. especially for the 'adverse conditions' . in a bad storm I'd want to make it to a port or at least to a harbor as fast as I could. But like I said, I'm not a blow boater, but it would be nice to have all the punch you could get when it's called upon. |
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